UFOs: The Research, the Evidence

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Well, I could not find the NOVA program section about the New Zealand UFOs on the dreaded Internet (there was one clip from the Walton segment). For those who do not have it on tape/DVD, I will try and give you some of the highlights and pertinent quotes:

It starts off with much of the same clips on the links previously provided. It recounts the flight of the Argosy and the discussion of the UFOs. They show Dr. Maccabee examining the one big looping frame of the "UFO" on the film. Dr. M states:

The shape of this loop, in my interpretation, is that the camera was bumped..(lists two other theories that the frame stuck due to vibration or exotic motion)..I tends toward the bumping theory myself

Note: I am not sure if Dr. M. has changed his opinion on this but it certainly looks like somebody just could not keep the camera steady during most of the shots.

We also were treated with a brief discussion by Dr. Bill Ireland, who is an Atmospheric physicist from New Zealand. Since this is his job, I would think Dr. Ireland can be considered an expert on Atmospheric physcis. He can make mistakes but I would put his opinion over some nameless person claiming to be a scientist or a scientist who is an optical physicist (and not an expert in atmospheric physics) with a bias towards UFOs.

Dr. Ireland: I think they saw things that can be quite easily explained....I could find no example that they gave that could not be explained.

His examples were various items including the lights of towns, beacons, ships, etc. He did not go into detail (the section on the program was no more than 10 minutes long) but I assume his paper on the subject was more informative.

Nova states that Dr. Maccabee said there were Five tie-ups of visual sighitngs with radar contacts. Note that this is far less than the number of contacts that were alluded to by the reporter describing the events.

We then hear an interesting part of the flight by Capt. Startup himself.

He (the wellington ATC) indicated that the image on the radar screen and the aircraft were virtually merged together. Then he said they were behind us by a couple of miles. SO at that stage with both of us having looked around and about 55 miles out of Christchurch, we started to go into the turn..... (they performed a full 360 degree turn - the second of the night)...We did the orbit and there was no sign of what it was. Strangely, as we went around, Wellington, who could still reach us, had the two images. Went around....nothing...surprising!

Again, another indicator that anamolous propogation conditions existed that night. Phantom contacts, coming and going, disappearing and reappearing and only small indistinct lights to show for it.

We then see John Cordy an ATC Wellington (who was not on duty at the time) reports seeing such "angels" before. He comments, "They had exactly the same appearance as an aircraft echo."

The program mentions that AP was not unusual for this time of year in New Zealand:

Two days after the film sightings a RNZAF Orion took off to investigate another set of strange blips. As usual the echos did not persist for long but guided by the radar controllers, the Orion found in some instances, a boat, and in other cases, turbulence, where the blip had been.

Klass reports that the scientists from the Physics and Engineering Lab (including Dr. Ireland) saw numerous spurious contacts while observing the Wellington radar on several nights. This is nothing unusual for that time of year (this was emphasized by Dr. Ireland in the program). The segment closes with the narrator making some pertinent points:

It is impossible to prove conclusively what the New Zealand UFOs were. But like most UFO sightings, part of its interest lies in what it reveals about ourselves. Some people when confronted with unfamiliar lights in the sky like this feel the need to find an unusual explanation. For them, science has taken much of the mystery out of life and by concluding that the answer can be found in beings from other worlds, they return an element of mystery to our own world.

Because we have a film of these lights, and some supposed radar contacts to confirm them, we are supposed to draw the conclusion of alien spaceships. It seems far more likely that it was simply misidentified lights and spurious radar contacts that created this story. I am sure Dr. M and his puppet will disagree with this but there is no proof that aliens were involved.
 
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Well, I could not find the NOVA program section about the New Zealand UFOs on the dreaded Internet (there was one clip from the Walton segment). For those who do not have it on tape/DVD, I will try and give you some of the highlights and pertinent quotes: [...]


Thanks for the review, Astrophotographer. Would you say any of the material could be considered evidence of any particular, non-mundane thing?
 
Thanks for the review, Astrophotographer. Would you say any of the material could be considered evidence of any particular, non-mundane thing?

Well, the NOVA program did not see any evidence for aliens. I went back and read a few MUFON journals and many were not pleased with the program's presentation (NOVA would do another abduction program in the 90s that generated a similar UFO proponent response). Like the NAS commentary on the Condon report, NOVA pretty much implied there are always more reasonable explanations and avenues to be pursued before going down the path of "exotic/alien/mysterious phenomena unknown to science". I don't consider NOVA a program that is absolutely scientific but it presents most of their shows in a scientific setting with an effort to examine the evidence. Compared to the stuff on the SCI-FI/history channel (UFO hunters!), it is as scientific a program as you are going to get.
 
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Rramjet, everyone, and I mean everyone, has a cameraphone these days. Why are you looking at 30-year-old TV broadcasts. Get something new up here!
Soooo…another proponent of the theory: “As evidence ages, so it becomes less valuable”. Try arguing your theory to a Holocaust victim or their families.

Since I have a pilots license the first assertion you make is obviously not true. Secondly, I did not say anything about water or if they were in- or outside the plane. You jump conclusions.
Since you “have a pilots licence” you say that water CAN form in “droplets” on the outside of a plane’s cockpit windows while flying?
The only other interpretation of your original statement would be to suppose that condensation was forming on the inside of the cockpit windows but that is equally implausible (especially given the weather conditions, the type of plane, the altitude, etc)!

I notice that this is your interpretation of the text. I just want to remind you that your opinion doesn't equal objective truth. And, the same goes for my opinion. A scientific report should not be open to interpretation. That's a pretty simple concept that UFOlogists fail to understand.
I am afraid you have misinterpreted what a “scientific” report is… It is often instructive to include a “history” of events recounted from an eyewitness point of view so that it may provide context and perspective to later empirical analysis. This is nothing unusual.

Moreover, let’s cite your original quote in context shall we…

”At about 0005 (12:05 A.M., local time), the captain and copilot first noticed oddly behaving lights ahead of them near the Kaikoura Coast. They had flown this route many times before and were thoroughly familiar with the lights along the coast so they quickly realized that these were not ordinary coastal lights. These lights would appear, project a beam downward toward the sea, and then disappear, only to reappear at some other location. Sometimes there was only one, sometimes none and sometimes several…”
(http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc)


Sure, I'll get there. In the mean time, why don't you tell me how many radar contacts actually coincides in time and space with visual contacts. Or haven't you checked? You just assume there are many?
Since I (unlike you) have actually read the document(s) in question, I no longer need to assume anything.

It is however obvious what you are driving at here. You assume that because there were a number of radar contacts for which visual identification was not confirmed, then that somehow throws into doubt those contacts where visual (AND “caught on film”) radar contacts were confirmed. Can you please explain the scientific theory behind your assumption here – or are you in fact operating on an extended version of the “correlation equals causation” fallacy?

I'm sure that you can either summarize or point out where the author presents the arguments that rule out "clutter effects of mild atmospheric refraction" that was common in the area. I can't find it so I would be greatful.
I think that before we do that you actually need to get a handle on the history of the event so that you can understand what this document is actually referring to.

” These events occurred between about 0010 hours (12:10 A.M.) and 0100 (1:00 A.M.) local (daylight saving) time. During this time the airplane, an Argosy 4 engine freighter, flew southward from Wellington to Christchurch. The flight track of the aircraft is illustrated in Figure 4 along with the times of various events to be described. (There was a second series of events which were visually and photographically more impressive than the ones discussed here as the aircraft flew northward along the same track between about 0200 (2:00 A.M.) and 0300 hours. Two of those events have been discussed in depth (see Maccabee, 1979, 1980 and 1987)).”
( http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc)

So, the events discussed in this “Radar” document primarily relate to the “first” series of sightings. There was a “more impressive” series of sightings that occurred as the plane flew the return leg, northbound.

It must be noted that on the return leg, over a four minute period, according to Dr Maccebee (1979), “The object was observed by four witnesses as well as the cameraman, and it was detected continuously by the airplane radar during a portion of the time it was seen visually.”

It was this “second” run that produced the film that was seen around the world (and that I have referenced). Unfortunately, Christchurch radar did not pick up this object, so the ground radar analysis conducted by Dr Maccabee was necessarily restricted to the targets detected on the “first” run southbound. It was noted by Dr Maccebee (1979) that (given the capabilities of Christchurch radar) the “second” run target must have been “…a weak reflector of 50-cm waves or below about 1 km in altitude (or both)”.

Now, that being cleared up we can discuss the targets on the “first” run (as outlined in the document (http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc).

”It has been necessary to present history of these events in order to establish the context for the following question: are there logically acceptable explanations in terms of conventional phenomena for the unidentified radar targets and visual sightings? For some, but not all, of the events involving only the radar targets the answer ranges from perhaps to yes. For the visual events, however, the answer appears to be a firm no. As pointed out above, the film of the three appearances of a blue-white light, regardless of exactly where the plane was when it was filmed, is a completely unexplainable because there was just no source for such a light. This is not a question of poor recollection on the part of witnesses or failing to identify coastal lights or other normal lights in the area. Similarly, the visual sightings of lights with beams going downward that appeared and disappeared above Kaikoura (or in the direction toward Kaikoura but closer to the airplane) are unexplained. The sighting of a small light ahead of the aircraft at 0016 is unexplained because there was simply no light to be seen in that direction. The sighting of a flashing light ahead at 0027 (which is likely to have been the light that was filmed) is unexplained, again because there was no light in that direction. And last, but certainly not least, the sighting of a flashing light at the right side for a couple of minutes starting at about 0030:45 is unexplained because there simply was no light like that to be seen along the distant coastline or in the vicinity of the plane.”

(…)

”All of the discussion about radar targets to this point has not tackled a fundamental question which is, what is the significance of transient targets that appeared near the aircraft? A related question is, what was reflecting the radiation, since the presence of any target return on the radar screen means that something has reflected the radiation? The trivial answer, that some unknown airplane was being detected, is not relevant here. During these sightings there was only one known aircraft in the sky.”

(…)

”One may conclude from the discussion thus far that the radar targets detected near the coast could be explained as the effects of normal atmospheric refraction causing the radar to illuminate ground targets in a random manner. However, this not a convincing explanation for all the targets that were observed near the airplane. And none of these is a satisfactory explanation for the Double Sized Target. ”

You asserted:
” I would also like to point out that the film crew was onboard just because there had been UFO reports some days earlier. Because of that it is more than usually likely that any events would be interpreted in a UFO context and not with a clear, analytical mind. Selective perception and confirmation bias is something one should be aware of imo.’

To which I replied:
” Well, of course, the film camera also went into this whole thing with a preconceived notion of what it should be filming too! (as did the ground radar…:).

Besides, precisely how does ”selective perception and confirmation bias” come into the viewing of unidentified, oddly behaving lights? You will need to explain this (these) unfounded, generalised assertion(s). Unless you can explain your use of the terms as they apply to the actual sighting, you are merely grasping at straws here I am afraid.

I CAN however see how confirmation bias might have come into the decision to release the footage almost immediately on broadcast TV as “UFOs” without film (or any other scientific) analysis - but the actual viewing of unidentified “lights in the sky” …?”

I am obviously talking about the interpretation of what was seen and filmed during this flight. You deliberately try to misunderstand simply because you can't come up with any counter arguments. Cowardly debating tactics. You never present any critical analysis of your own but only keep referring to different documents you find on the web. Documents that anyone can cast doubt on which you refuse to see.
Perhaps you might care to explain how my reply to your initial unfounded assertions might be considered “cowardly”…? No? I thought not… :cool:

Then… IF you are “talking about the interpretation of what was seen and filmed during this flight”, you will of course be able to explain how YOUR claim of ”selective perception and confirmation bias” operated and what the result was.

As for critical analysis…I already TOLD you how I saw “confirmation bias” fitting into the event… and that my analysis in that direction does not accord with your unfounded assertions. YOU need to explain HOW the assertions you made actually apply, otherwise they remain unfounded.

Exactly because it's assumed from the beginning to be no mundane things. Happy now?
Point to anywhere in the extensive documentation of this case where the eyewitnesses “interpreted” the objects as anything other than “lights” or “unidentified objects”. It was only AFTER, that the perhaps (at the time) premature “UFO” (with its attendant ramifications) tag was attached. Moreover, are you suggesting that they go into the potential sighting with a bias in the direction of “It MUST be mundane”? THAT is not “scientific”… they went into the event wanting to see if there was any veracity in the accounts of “UFOs” being seen in the area…they wanted to see (if it were true) if they could capture any potential UFOs on film. Exactly HOW is such an attitude “biased”?

Your original questions were:
”How many radar echos were seen?
How many lights were seen?
How many of those coincided in time and space?
How many did not coincide in time and space?”


To which I replied:
All the information required to satisfactorily answer those questions is contained within the document YOU claimed you were reading above... you have just shown me that you have NOT read the document at all! Another confirmation of the (by now) UFO debunker truism "Don't bother me with the evidence, my mind is made up".
Ok, so you can't answer because you haven't thought of this before? Go figure. Ok, I'll do the counting then. I found 3 that seems to coincide.

Gonna take me a lil bit longer to count the ones that didn't coincide because they are plenty!
Let’s just briefly recap the history of the southbound leg:

0005 “oddly behaving lights … These lights would appear, project a beam downward toward the sea, and then disappear, only to reappear at some other location. Sometimes there was only one, sometimes none and sometimes several” (unknown if ground radar had them specifically as this was before pilot’s first contact with ground radar)

0012 Pilots first contact Wellington ground radar (WATCC). Controller stated that he “had noticed targets appearing and disappearing in that direction for half an hour or more.” Pilot asks WATCC “If you've got a chance would you keep an eye on them?" "Certainly," was the reply.

0015 WATCC reports target “at 3:00 position”. No visual.

0016 WATCC reports "Target briefly appeared 12:00 to you at 10 miles." Visual confirmed.

0016:30 WATCC reports a "...strong target showing at 11:00 at 3 miles." No visual.

0017:18 WATCC reports “target "just left of 9:00 at 2 miles." No visual.

0019 WATCC reported at target at 10:00 at 12 miles. No visual. However:
” The captain has written (7) that he got the impression from this series of targets that some object that was initially ahead of his plane had traveled past the left side. He decided to make an orbit (360 degree turn) to find out if they could see anything at their left side or behind.”[/IINDENT]

0020:30 WATCC reports “"there is another target that just appeared on your left side about 1 mile....briefly and then disappearing again." No visual but “the air crew was still seeing anomalous lights near the coast.”

(about) 0023: (as the plane completes its 360 orbit) WATCC reports "The target I mentioned a moment ago is still just about 5:00 to you, stationary." No visual but they could still “see the anomalous lights near Kaikoura.”

It is interesting to note that during this period the WATCC appears to confirm these lights near Kaikoura as definite radar targets, however:
”WATCC controller noticed targets continuing to appear, remain for one or two sweeps of the radar, and then disappear close to the Kaikoura Coast. However, he did not report these to the airplane. He reported only the targets which were appearing near the airplane, now about 25 miles off the coast. The TV reporter, who was able to watch the skies continually, has stated (8) that he continually saw anomalous lights "over Kaikoura," that is, they appeared to be higher than the lights along the coastline at the town of Kaikoura.”

00:27 WATCC reports "Target is at 12:00 at 3 miles." The captain responded immediately, "Thank you. We pick it up. It's got a flashing light." The captain reported seeing "a couple of very bright blue-white lights, flashing regularly at a rapid rate…”

It is probable that the cameraman captured this light on film as the film of the event shows a light matching the description supplied by the witnesses, however as Dr Maccebee notes:
“Unfortunately the camera was not synchronized with either the WATCC tape recorder or the tape recorder on the plane so the times of the film images must be inferred by matching the verbal descriptions with the film images.

(…)

The probability is high, although one cannot absolutely certain, that the air crew, the reporter and cameraman all saw and recorded on tape and film the appearance of the light at 3 miles in front of the aircraft. If true, then this might have been a radar/visual/photographic sighting. (A radar/visual/photographic sighting did occur about an hour later as the airplane flew northward from Christchurch.)”

(about) 0029 “WATCC reported a target 1 mile behind the plane.”

(about) 0031 WATCC “reported a target about 4 miles behind the airplane.”

(target then disappears from radar but at about)

0031:30 WATCC “reported a target at 3:00 at 4 miles.”

Then:
“Two sweeps of the radar beam later he saw something really surprising. He reported, "There's a strong target right in formation with you. Could be right or left. Your target has doubled in size… The extraordinary condition of a "double size target" (DST) persisted for at least 36 seconds. "

“The cameraman told the reporter about the target flying in formation and the reporter started looking through the right side window for the target. The copilot was also looking and after some seconds he spotted a light which he described as follows: "It was like the fixed navigation lights on a small airplane when one passes you at night. It was much smaller than the really big ones we had seen over Kaikoura. At irregular intervals it appeared to flash, but it didn't flash on and off; it brightened or perhaps twinkled around the edges. When it did this I could see color, a slight tinge of green or perhaps red. It's very difficult describing a small light you see at night.

(…)
During this time the reporter also saw the light and recorded his impression: "I'm looking over towards the right of the aircraft and we have an object confirmed by Wellington radar. It's been following us for quite a while. It's about 4 miles away and it looks like a very faint star, but then it emits a bright white and green light." Unfortunately the light was too far to the right for the cameraman to be able to film it (he would have had to sit in the copilot's seat to do that). The captain was able to briefly see this light which the copilot had spotted. This event was a radar-visual sighting with several witnesses to the light.

About 82 seconds after Wellington reported that the DST had reduced to normal size, when the plane was approximately at point 17, the captain told WATCC, "Got a target at 3:00 just behind us," to which WATCC responded immediately, "Roger, and going around to 4:00 at 4 miles." This would appear to be a radar confirmation of the light that the crew saw at the right side."

0035 WATCC reports "The target you mentioned, the last one we mentioned, make it 5:00 at 4 miles previously, did you see anything?" The captain responded, "We saw that one. It came up at 4:00, I think, around 4 miles away, " to which WATCC responded, "Roger, that target is still stationary. It's now 6:00 to you at about 15 miles and it's been joined by two other targets."

“Then the WATCC reported that the three targets had been replaced by a single target. The captain, wondering about all this activity at his rear, requested a second two minute orbit. This was carried out at about 0036:30 (point 19). Nothing was seen and the single target disappeared. From then on the plane went straight into Christchurch. The Christchurch controller did report to the aircraft that his radar showed a target over land, west of the aircraft, that seemed to pace the aircraft but turned westward and traveled inland as the aircraft landed. The copilot looked to the right and saw a small light moving rapidly along with the aircraft. However, copilot duties during the landing itself prevented him from watching it continually and he lost sight of it just before the aircraft landed.”

Sooo… now we have the types of contact that were made and the context in which they were made, let’s look at your questions again:

How many radar echos were seen?
How many lights were seen?
How many of those coincided in time and space?
How many did not coincide in time and space?


Obviously there were numerous radar echoes. First there were the anomalous lights near Kaikoura, seen by the pilots and reporters, etc (at some distance from the plane) and these seemed to be confirmed by WATCC (but not directly reported to the plane).

Then there was the unidentified object nearer to the plane (within 4 or so miles). These were sometimes visible and at other times not. The descriptions of the lights when visible and confirmed by radar showed that they were blinking off and on – so even though there may have been a radar target, the crew might not necessarily have seen an object even if the object was exactly where the WATCC said it was (remembering this was occurring at night…).

It must be noted that the WATCC noted (reported) only ONE object (radar target) near the plane.

Summarising the answer to your first question then, we have numerous targets near the coast and these were visually confirmed from the plane. We also have one target near the plane, but this was only intermittently confirmed by visual from the plane.

The above then would also appear to answer your second question.

Now we must tackle your third and fourth questions. These are not so easy to directly answer. Indeed, it hardly makes sense to even TRY to quantify the sighting in this way.

It is obvious that WATCC did not report targets on every single sweep of the radar – although it is equally obvious that the target(s) must have been visible on the screen through successive sweeps. It seems that the WATCC only reported substantial events… like a large position change or the reappearance of the object after a disappearance. At each report we usually have some indication of whether there was a visual identification from the airplane also. Thus to quantify the event as you attempt to do is merely to allow one variable - the number of times the WATCC chose to report to the plane - to dictate the numerical outcome. Thus your third and fourth questions will not supply any answer that might represent a valid assessment of the sighting.​
 
Rramjet, you've lost. One more turd on your pile isn't going to help. You haven't provided any evidence to support your claim that aliens exist, and everyone here, including your sycophants, realizes that. Even SnidleyW, your most devoted minion, admits that he has nothing but wishful thinking, so you can't even convinced him, and he wants to believe.
 
Soooo…another proponent of the theory: “As evidence ages, so it becomes less valuable”. Try arguing your theory to a Holocaust victim or their families.
I don't recall photographs of the holocaust all being blurred beyond recognition and furthermore if the holocaust were going on to this day, I'm sure that, if not already accepted as a fact, it would not prove too difficult for someone to provide plenty of physical evidence of such.
Your analogy is clap trap.

Were there no UFO reports last year?
I know there was at least one good one, because I was personally involved in investigating it on the ground... and guess what it turned out to be? I'll give you a clue: It was blimp shaped. Of course the guy who reported it wont even entertain such an explanation... go figure.
http://www.cropcirclewisdom.com/barburyUFO/barburyUFO.html
 
First of all, even Maccabee admits there was Anamolous propogation (AP) conditions that night. He uses one radiosonde point to refute the idea that AP was involved. That Radiosonde was at Christchurch if I recall correctly. The radar data came from Wellington. The plane was between Christchurch and Wellington. Therefore, using radiosonde data that does not intersect the radar path is completely worthless. If you ever watched the Nova program I mentioned, you will see that Dr. Ireland discussed how the winds from the nw blows over the mountain ranges and causes irregularities in the radar path and can produce AP.
Nobody is disputing that there were possibly AP present. However, this must be considered in the context of the actual sighting events:

“It has been necessary to present history of these events in order to establish the context for the following question: are there logically acceptable explanations in terms of conventional phenomena for the unidentified radar targets and visual sightings? For some, but not all, of the events involving only the radar targets the answer ranges from perhaps to yes. For the visual events, however, the answer appears to be a firm no. As pointed out above, the film of the three appearances of a blue-white light, regardless of exactly where the plane was when it was filmed, is a completely unexplainable because there was just no source for such a light. This is not a question of poor recollection on the part of witnesses or failing to identify coastal lights or other normal lights in the area. Similarly, the visual sightings of lights with beams going downward that appeared and disappeared above Kaikoura (or in the direction toward Kaikoura but closer to the airplane) are unexplained. The sighting of a small light ahead of the aircraft at 0016 is unexplained because there was simply no light to be seen in that direction. The sighting of a flashing light ahead at 0027 (which is likely to have been the light that was filmed) is unexplained, again because there was no light in that direction. And last, but certainly not least, the sighting of a flashing light at the right side for a couple of minutes starting at about 0030:45 is unexplained because there simply was no light like that to be seen along the distant coastline or in the vicinity of the plane.”
(http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc)

Maccabee spends a lot of time trying to demonstrate that these were not point sources, but this was a large hand held camera shooting at "lights" through the window of the airplane where the operator keeps coming in and out of focus. He alsoa ppears to be adjusting the exposure settings causing the images to "bloom". If you want to say they show alien spaceships go right ahead.
Yes, the cameraman struggled with steadiness, focus and exposure, but there ARE sections of the film (and individual frames) where the “UFO” can clearly be seen. See the images contained in “A HISTORY OF THE NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS OF DECEMBER 31, 1978” for example. (this document can be found at (http://brumac.8k.com/) under the heading “NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS”

The key point in all of this is that they only recorded lights at night with the video camera and the radar contacts were ghost-like. Several times the pilots looped around to see if they could identify the radar contacts being report but they could not see anything. This means that AP was abundant that night and to suggest that a few of these were actual alien spaceships/UFOs/whatever, is ignoring the conditions that existed that night.

First, they did not “only” record “lights at night” - there was much more in the film that you credit. See the images contained in “A HISTORY OF THE NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS OF DECEMBER 31, 1978” for example. (this document can be found at (http://brumac.8k.com/) under the heading “NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS”

Second your statement that the radar contacts were “ghost like” is an untruth. Clearly the WATCC was reporting what it considered to be hard targets. See my post here:
for a summary.

Third, there were visual confirmations of many, if not most of the radar targets mentioned. If you don’t want to read the report, then See my post here:
for a summary.

It is also untrue to claim that “Several times the pilots looped around to see if they could identify the radar contacts being report but they could not see anything”. In fact they “looped” only twice, and did see lights while doing so. See my post here:
for a summary.

If you don't want to read any of the material outside Dr. Maccabee's website, which is no surprise, then you really are closed-minded and not very scientific. Let me know when you read Dr. Ireland's paper on the matter.
“Ireland (1979) suggested that while the plane was at the location indicated by 0251 on the map Crockett filmed one particular quick flashing white beacon in the entrance to Wellington Harbor (see Fig. 1). In making this suggestion Ireland completely ignored the red images in the film, he did not fully appreciate the implications of the degree of overexposure of the PY/O or BYW images, and he did not consider the consequences of the fact that the camera had a field of view of about 4 degrees by 6 degrees. The light suggested by Ireland flashes white about once every second, which is the proper rate. Nevertheless, it can be ruled out for several reasons. First, there are no adjacent red flashing lights which are bright enough to make images on film at the distance of the airplane from the harbor entrance. Second, within the field of view of the camera there were numerous other flashing and steady white lights, including some city lights of Wellington and some lights at the Wellington airport. These lights should have made numerous faint images, but there are no images on the film except those of the flashing light cluster discussed in the previous sections. Third, at the distance of the plane at 0251 from the beacon its intensity would have had to have been greater than 1E9 cd in order to saturate the film, but according to the New Zealand Nautical Almanac (1979), the actual intensity is rated at about 7E3 cd, which is much, much lower than required. Even at the distance of closest approach of the plane to the beacon, about 60 km, (when the beacon was not in front of the aircraft) its intensity would have had to have been about 2E7 cd in order to produce overexposed images. (See Figure 6 for b = 0.05/km, since the beacon was at ground level.)

Since the publication of his paper Ireland (private communication, 1984) has claimed that by the time of the sighting in December 1978, the beacon in Wellington Harbor had been replaced with a quick flashing strobe with a rated candlepower of 1E6. However, as pointed out above, even this intensity would not be bright enough to create overexposed images if photographed from the point of closest approach of the aircraft to the beacon. Furthermore, a strobe creates very short flashes of light, so one might expect to have PY/O images created by the strobe in one or at most two frames per cycle, not the six to eight frames per cycle in which they actually appear. Moreover, this still does not account for the presence of red lights below the white or BYW image (there are no red lights that could appear as below the quick flashing beacon mentioned by Ireland) and this does not explain the lack of images of other lights that would be apparent if the camera were pointed toward the Wellington harbor. Thus, in spite of Ireland's more recent claim, the harbor beacon hypothesis still fails for the above reasons.”
(http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/NZFlashingLight/NZFlashingLight.html)
 
Nobody is disputing that there were possibly AP present. However, this must be considered in the context of the actual sighting events:

Brings this illustration of mine to mind, done for another forum.

BirdUFO.jpg


As there was no way of determining the exact position of the lights that were seen (a point of light against a black sky), there is not really much to tie the radar and the lights together, unless you presume the radar was showing the lights, which kind of seems like putting the cart before the horse to me.
 
..Snip..
Were there no UFO reports last year?
I know there was at least one good one, because I was personally involved in investigating it on the ground... and guess what it turned out to be? I'll give you a clue: It was blimp shaped. Of course the guy who reported it wont even entertain such an explanation... go figure.
http://www.cropcirclewisdom.com/barburyUFO/barburyUFO.html

That page is hard to read as anything but parody. :)
It does give insight in the mindset.:tinfoil

BTW: As a passenger I have noticed plenty of water droplets on airplane windows.
 
Well, I could not find the NOVA program section about the New Zealand UFOs on the dreaded Internet (there was one clip from the Walton segment). For those who do not have it on tape/DVD, I will try and give you some of the highlights and pertinent quotes:

It starts off with much of the same clips on the links previously provided. It recounts the flight of the Argosy and the discussion of the UFOs. They show Dr. Maccabee examining the one big looping frame of the "UFO" on the film. Dr. M states:


The shape of this loop, in my interpretation, is that the camera was bumped..(lists two other theories that the frame stuck due to vibration or exotic motion)..I tends toward the bumping theory myself

Note: I am not sure if Dr. M. has changed his opinion on this but it certainly looks like somebody just could not keep the camera steady during most of the shots.
To his credit Dr Macabee states the above, yet YOU Astrophotographer FAIL to mention what he states here:
About 3 minutes into the film, while Crockett was holding the camera on his shoulder, the camera apparently bumped something which caused a momentary oscillation of the camera pointing direction. This motion created the famous “ampersand-shaped” image that was shown around the world.

(…)

Although most images may be distorted by motion, many are not. The undistorted images occur in “stationary frames” when the camera momentarily stops moving.
So… presumably we can obtain “good” images of the “light(s)” when the camera is not moving (as described above). Such images are reproduced in the document titled “A HISTORY OF THE NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS OF DECEMBER 31, 1978”*. For example Figure 17, Figure 21, and Figure 25.

(*this document can be found at (http://brumac.8k.com/) under the heading “NEW ZEALAND SIGHTINGS”)

We also were treated with a brief discussion by Dr. Bill Ireland, who is an Atmospheric physicist from New Zealand. Since this is his job, I would think Dr. Ireland can be considered an expert on Atmospheric physcis. He can make mistakes but I would put his opinion over some nameless person claiming to be a scientist or a scientist who is an optical physicist (and not an expert in atmospheric physics) with a bias towards UFOs.

Dr. Ireland: I think they saw things that can be quite easily explained....I could find no example that they gave that could not be explained.

His examples were various items including the lights of towns, beacons, ships, etc. He did not go into detail (the section on the program was no more than 10 minutes long) but I assume his paper on the subject was more informative.
“BUT I ASSUME HIS PAPER…”!???? Now I CAN call you a hypocrite directly!
If you don't want to read any of the material outside Dr. Maccabee's website, which is no surprise, then you really are closed-minded and not very scientific. Let me know when you read Dr. Ireland's paper on the matter.
Let me know when YOU have read Dr Ireland’s paper! LOL.

Nova states that Dr. Maccabee said there were Five tie-ups of visual sighitngs with radar contacts. Note that this is far less than the number of contacts that were alluded to by the reporter describing the events.
This is mere unfounded assertion. You provide no quotes or figures to support your assertions and thus we are entitled to dismiss them as having NO supporting evidence (especially as has already been demonstrated here.
that you have a propensity for telling ... how can I put it politely... well, I'll leave the readers to make up their own minds)

We then hear an interesting part of the flight by Capt. Startup himself.

He (the wellington ATC) indicated that the image on the radar screen and the aircraft were virtually merged together. Then he said they were behind us by a couple of miles. SO at that stage with both of us having looked around and about 55 miles out of Christchurch, we started to go into the turn..... (they performed a full 360 degree turn - the second of the night)...We did the orbit and there was no sign of what it was. Strangely, as we went around, Wellington, who could still reach us, had the two images. Went around....nothing...surprising!

Again, another indicator that anamolous propogation conditions existed that night. Phantom contacts, coming and going, disappearing and reappearing and only small indistinct lights to show for it.
This is misrepresentation.
Nobody is disputing that there were possibly AP present. However, this must be considered in the context of the actual sighting events:

“It has been necessary to present history of these events in order to establish the context for the following question: are there logically acceptable explanations in terms of conventional phenomena for the unidentified radar targets and visual sightings? For some, but not all, of the events involving only the radar targets the answer ranges from perhaps to yes. For the visual events, however, the answer appears to be a firm no. As pointed out above, the film of the three appearances of a blue-white light, regardless of exactly where the plane was when it was filmed, is a completely unexplainable because there was just no source for such a light. This is not a question of poor recollection on the part of witnesses or failing to identify coastal lights or other normal lights in the area. Similarly, the visual sightings of lights with beams going downward that appeared and disappeared above Kaikoura (or in the direction toward Kaikoura but closer to the airplane) are unexplained. The sighting of a small light ahead of the aircraft at 0016 is unexplained because there was simply no light to be seen in that direction. The sighting of a flashing light ahead at 0027 (which is likely to have been the light that was filmed) is unexplained, again because there was no light in that direction. And last, but certainly not least, the sighting of a flashing light at the right side for a couple of minutes starting at about 0030:45 is unexplained because there simply was no light like that to be seen along the distant coastline or in the vicinity of the plane.”
(http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc)

We then see John Cordy an ATC Wellington (who was not on duty at the time) reports seeing such "angels" before. He comments, "They had exactly the same appearance as an aircraft echo."
NOT ON DUTY at the time…!? So HOW pray tell could he know precisely what the radar showed on the night? This is mere speculation!

The program mentions that AP was not unusual for this time of year in New Zealand:

Two days after the film sightings a RNZAF Orion took off to investigate another set of strange blips. As usual the echos did not persist for long but guided by the radar controllers, the Orion found in some instances, a boat, and in other cases, turbulence, where the blip had been.
First it must be noted that there were NO boats. Second, Dr Maccabee discusses AP in detail in his radar analysis document (http://brumac.8k.com/NEW_ZEALAND/RADARUFOS.doc) and concludes:

“One may conclude from the discussion thus far that the radar targets detected near the coast could be explained as the effects of normal atmospheric refraction causing the radar to illuminate ground targets in a random manner. However, this not a convincing explanation for all the targets that were observed near the airplane. And none of these is a satisfactory explanation for the Double Sized Target.”

What Dr Macebee forgets to mention here is that the radar targets near the coast ALSO had visual confirmation!

Klass reports that the scientists from the Physics and Engineering Lab (including Dr. Ireland) saw numerous spurious contacts while observing the Wellington radar on several nights. This is nothing unusual for that time of year (this was emphasized by Dr. Ireland in the program). The segment closes with the narrator making some pertinent points:

It is impossible to prove conclusively what the New Zealand UFOs were. But like most UFO sightings, part of its interest lies in what it reveals about ourselves. Some people when confronted with unfamiliar lights in the sky like this feel the need to find an unusual explanation. For them, science has taken much of the mystery out of life and by concluding that the answer can be found in beings from other worlds, they return an element of mystery to our own world.

Because we have a film of these lights, and some supposed radar contacts to confirm them, we are supposed to draw the conclusion of alien spaceships. It seems far more likely that it was simply misidentified lights and spurious radar contacts that created this story. I am sure Dr. M and his puppet will disagree with this but there is no proof that aliens were involved.
This is a gross overgeneralisation of the case by both Klass and Astrophotographer. CLEARLY there were UFOs observed by the witnesses at the same time as radar had them and the cameraman filmed them. See my post here for a summary

Ah… “there is no proof that aliens were involved”. That’s the bottom line now isn’t it. Somehow there has to be “proof” that aliens were involved. We must now conveniently forget the fact that it is no longer possible to come up with mundane explanations that fit the evidence… now you want direct proof of aliens!

Tell me what your thought processes are when you discover there simply IS no mundane explanation for a UFO sighting Astrophotographer? What DO you suppose might be occurring?
 
Tell me what your thought processes are when you discover there simply IS no mundane explanation for a UFO sighting Astrophotographer? What DO you suppose might be occurring?
To make sure you aren't shifting the burden of proof, Rramjet, I'll ask this again:
So what particular thing are you hypothesizing this UFO to be?
You've conveniently overlooked it every other time I've asked.
 
Rramjet said:
Soooo…another proponent of the theory: “As evidence ages, so it becomes less valuable”. Try arguing your theory to a Holocaust victim or their families.
I don't recall photographs of the holocaust all being blurred beyond recognition and furthermore if the holocaust were going on to this day, I'm sure that, if not already accepted as a fact, it would not prove too difficult for someone to provide plenty of physical evidence of such.
Your analogy is clap trap.

Were there no UFO reports last year?
I know there was at least one good one, because I was personally involved in investigating it on the ground... and guess what it turned out to be? I'll give you a clue: It was blimp shaped. Of course the guy who reported it wont even entertain such an explanation... go figure.
http://www.cropcirclewisdom.com/barburyUFO/barburyUFO.html
- The Holocaust was a discrete event. It happened 70 years ago. And yet, the photos of the Holocaust are not blurry.
- Are you saying that UFOs stopped appearing in the past 10 - 20 years?
- If so, why?
 
To make sure you aren't shifting the burden of proof, Rramjet, I'll ask this again:

So what particular thing are you hypothesizing this UFO to be?

You've conveniently overlooked it every other time I've asked.

Shifting the burden of proof?! LOL. I merely asked Astrophotographer what his thought processes might be given a particular circumstance. I might ask YOU exactly the same question:

Tell me what your thought processes are when you discover there simply IS no mundane explanation for a UFO sighting RoboTimbo? What DO you suppose might be occurring?

Can I expect an answer?

Why should I have to “hypothesise” anything about this UFO? The sighting constitutes evidence that there are things flying around in our skies that appear to have no plausible mundane explanation (at least none that fits the concurrent eyewitness descriptions, the film and the radar evidence). I conclude from this (and a number of other cases presented in this thread– and some not presented also) that it would be pertinent to conduct some well funded, targeted, peer-reviewed research into UFOs to see if we can’t find out what the *bleep* they are. I DO have a personal opinion about what might be occurring, but you don’t WANT opinion here, so it would be useless for me to state that opinion - besides you would only howl it down as “unfounded opinion”.

I am sticking to my stated objectives in this forum. That is to provide evidence and research to support the case that UFOs not only exist, but that they have NO mundane explanations. The methodology I am employing is to start from the base and work upward, adding new layers of evidence with each case I present. We started with “mere” sighting reports, progressed through “official” sightings, to physical trace evidence, to now combine visual, radar and film. (oh, there were some “aliens” in there as well as an abduction case but they were asides from the main game…a foretaste if you will :)

So I’m sticking to my outlined strategy and I am sorry if you do not like or understand it, but it is what it is.
 
The problem is that method, is that you will never be able to remove all mundane explanation, heck you did not up to now remove the most probable ones. So you keep "thinking" you add layer over layer, but the ground layer, the fundation if you prefer, are all cracked and supporting none of the later layer.

Therefore in the end, you are acting on the faith and confidence this emthod will elad you somewhere, while it is very obvious for anybody critically looking at your method that it is uterly flawed and will lead you nowhere, jsut as it led GENERATIONS of "UFO=Alien" believer nowwhere (and before you protest and say you don't believe they are alien but inside earth people or whatever, you are missing the point : replace Alien by whatever you want, you won't be more advanced than your predecessor).

In a way that remind me of the Nessie and similar hoax, or even god believer, where generation of peoples have used similar reasoning for their basis, and we know where it led : nowwhere. It all end up to the believer in (whatever) standing on his original conviction, and trying to add layer of what he sees as evidence, but starts from a bad fundation, add circular logic, and lead to NOWWHERE.
 
I conclude from this (and a number of other cases presented in this thread– and some not presented also) that it would be pertinent to conduct some well funded, targeted, peer-reviewed research into UFOs to see if we can’t find out what the *bleep* they are.
If I were you and it’s funding you want, I would steer as far clear of Maccabee’s pusedoscientific “research” as I could get.

[too late for that though, he's already turned you into his sock puppet]

More importantly, what’s the big deal? UFOs are clearly not a threat to National Security or anything else for that matter…

[although some of the people associated with them may be]
 
Since you “have a pilots licence” you say that water CAN form in “droplets” on the outside of a plane’s cockpit windows while flying?
The only other interpretation of your original statement would be to suppose that condensation was forming on the inside of the cockpit windows but that is equally implausible (especially given the weather conditions, the type of plane, the altitude, etc)!

Yes, I have seeen it both inside and outside and on camera lenses. I have also seen other substances like oil. And notice, I'm not saying it IS droplets. I just made a comment that it looks like that. It's the first thing that came to my mind, not aliens.

I am afraid you have misinterpreted what a “scientific” report is… It is often instructive to include a “history” of events recounted from an eyewitness point of view so that it may provide context and perspective to later empirical analysis. This is nothing unusual.

That would surely surprise most of the scientists at my university. I can't really see this in a thesis: "Lisa saw me put the blood sample into the centrifuge at approximately 9AM. Everything seemed to work ok when I turned it on but suddenly Lisa says she saw something extraordinary..."

It is however obvious what you are driving at here. You assume that because there were a number of radar contacts for which visual identification was not confirmed, then that somehow throws into doubt those contacts where visual (AND “caught on film”) radar contacts were confirmed. Can you please explain the scientific theory behind your assumption here – or are you in fact operating on an extended version of the “correlation equals causation” fallacy?

There's something wrong with my tv. The screen sometimes goes black for a few seconds before the pic comes back. I also have a fly in my room that sometimes land on my tv. Three times I've noticed that the tv goes black when the fly lands on it. Should my first assumption be that the fly is causing the problem and that, on the several other occasions the tv blacks out, an invisible fly is causing the problem? Or, when the fly lands and no problem occurs that it's a different species of fly?

I think that before we do that you actually need to get a handle on the history of the event so that you can understand what this document is actually referring to.
<snip>

You are not answering the question I am asking. It was "where does the author present the arguments that rule out "clutter effects of mild atmospheric refraction that was common in the area."

Your original questions were:
”How many radar echos were seen?
How many lights were seen?
How many of those coincided in time and space?
How many did not coincide in time and space?”


To which I replied:
All the information required to satisfactorily answer those questions is contained within the document YOU claimed you were reading above... you have just shown me that you have NOT read the document at all! Another confirmation of the (by now) UFO debunker truism "Don't bother me with the evidence, my mind is made up".

Let’s just briefly recap the history of the southbound leg:
<snip>

The answer to a question on the format "how many" is either a number or "I don't know". It is most certainly not 82 lines of text. You are deliberatly trying to obfuscate things here. I wonder why.
 
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The problem is that method, is that you will never be able to remove all mundane explanation, heck you did not up to now remove the most probable ones. So you keep "thinking" you add layer over layer, but the ground layer, the fundation if you prefer, are all cracked and supporting none of the later layer.

Therefore in the end, you are acting on the faith and confidence this emthod will elad you somewhere, while it is very obvious for anybody critically looking at your method that it is uterly flawed and will lead you nowhere, jsut as it led GENERATIONS of "UFO=Alien" believer nowwhere (and before you protest and say you don't believe they are alien but inside earth people or whatever, you are missing the point : replace Alien by whatever you want, you won't be more advanced than your predecessor).

In a way that remind me of the Nessie and similar hoax, or even god believer, where generation of peoples have used similar reasoning for their basis, and we know where it led : nowwhere. It all end up to the believer in (whatever) standing on his original conviction, and trying to add layer of what he sees as evidence, but starts from a bad fundation, add circular logic, and lead to NOWWHERE.
Welcome to the fray Aepervius!

And precisely what mundane explanations are you talking about?

For example in the present case, the primary “mundane” explanation that has been proposed has been Anomalous Propagation radar targets. However, there are a couple of points that need to be noted (aside from what I have already posted above).

First, on the southern leg, the targets of interest were actually within a few miles of the airplane, which was some 20 miles off the coast, whereas the "anomalous propagation" targets were generally close to the coast.

While it can not be precisely determined whether these were correlated with the "anomalous lights" that "turned on and beamed down", we do know that WATCC observed radar targets in the same general area where the crew consistently observed anomalous lights (the WATCC just did not report this to the plane at the time). That is, we can say that the anomalous lights (that were seen by all the witnesses on numerous occasions) appeared to be near the coast in the area of the anomalous radar targets. Thus at the very least, while we cannot be 100% sure, some of the radar targets could easily have been related to those lights.

Second, the WATCC radar operator (Causer) reported only the targets that were relatively close to the plane. The fact that a visible light was not always associated with a radar target does not automatically mean it was anomalous propagation. It has been noted that the lights that were definitely associated with the radar targets were seen blinking on and off and it must be remembered this was at night.

Third the “blue-white light” images are important from the point of view of the film documentation of the visual sightings because there was no mundane source of blue-white light anywhere near or in or on the plane.

Finally, the most unusual radar event was clearly the DST (double sized target) incident - and the events leading up to and following it. Such things as “double sized targets” are simply not supposed to happen. Had the DST occurred during only 1 sweep one might get away with arguing AP (anomalous propagation). However its presence through at least 3 full sweeps means that, if it were an AP, then it was moving at the speed of the plane - some 247 mph!

It is interesting also to note that just before the DST there was a report of a target 1 mile behind, then 4 miles behind, then 4 miles to the right (3:00 position) and then the DST (for 3 sweeps) and then the anomalous target apparently disappeared only to reappear again at 4:00 at 4 miles, then Causer (WATCC) reported 5:00 at 10 miles…

(apologies - I forgot to include this in the sighting timeline summary in my post above
“Fifty seconds after reporting the target that was "going around to 4:00 at 4 miles" the WATCC operator was in communication with the Christchurch Air Traffic Control Center. He told the air traffic controller that there was a target at 5:00 at about 10 miles.”

…then three targets 15 miles behind.

What does this sound like? An object with variable radar reflectivity ("cross-section") that approached the plane from behind, then moved to the right side, then got close to the right side (within 2 miles, the so called DST event), then tracked with the plane and then stopped moving, letting the plane continue onward. All of this was happening more than 20 miles from where the coastal AP targets would have been (along the coast north of the Kaikoura peninsula).

So all in all, while some of the coastal targets may have been AP, the DST (at the very least) certainly was not. So Dr Maccabee in his analysis has most definitely “removed” (at the very least) your “most probable” mundane targets and has also refuted the “mundane” claims of Klass, Sheaffer and Ireland. What then are we left with? Of course we are left with NO mundane explanation at all!

****************

This is not “acting on faith”, it is recognising the results and conclusions of a thoroughly detailed and scientific analysis! If such a method, according to you, is “utterly flawed”, then please have the courage of your beliefs to state precisely WHERE it is flawed.

Finally, I don’t propose “alien” here, I propose RESEARCH! …and are you seriously contending that scientific research does (and will) lead us nowhere?
 
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